Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • - Porn and your brain.

  • I hope this video makes you OnePercentBetter.

  • Now over to Alexis from the channel Lifelong Learners.

  • - [Alex] Thanks for the introduction Brandon.

  • It's good to be OnePercentBetter today.

  • My name is Alex, and I'm gonna talk about porn.

  • It's often portrayed as a passive or positive habit.

  • But, do you know how it affects your brain?

  • Your brain is the most sophisticated mass of cells

  • on the planet and when you watch porn,

  • it releases a complex surge of chemicals

  • that burns the experience into your mind

  • and over time can lead to addiction.

  • Approximately 5% of all internet traffic is porn related

  • and for many college-age men

  • and women watching porn is a weekly or daily activity.

  • Your brain is small but hungry.

  • It consumes 20% of your oxygen

  • and blood circulation just to operate.

  • It has over one quadrillion synapses enabling

  • a complex system of cell-to-cell communication.

  • It's also adaptable, or plastic in its ability

  • to change at any age.

  • This organ of one billion neurons is always

  • making new connections.

  • The brain's grey matter can actually shrink or thicken.

  • Neural pathways or connections can be forged,

  • refined, weakened or cut depending on a range

  • of things like hormones, the environment or trauma.

  • Neurons that fire together start to wire together.

  • It's helpful to compare your thinking patterns

  • to tracks on a snow-covered mountain.

  • As you consistently move down the mountain

  • on the same track the path becomes easier

  • and smoother for next time.

  • Your brain responds in a very similar way to porn as to sex.

  • So, what actually happens inside your head?

  • Initially, your brain starts to release

  • a surge of dopamine which creates a state of tension,

  • focus and pleasure.

  • Norepinephrine is also released which makes you more alert

  • and burns the experience into your mind.

  • That's why these experiences can

  • become like a neurological tattoo.

  • They are difficult for you to forget or wipe away.

  • At the moment of climax oxytocin

  • and vasopressin are released.

  • These act like bonding agents.

  • They bond you to the person or object causing your arousal.

  • They are also released when a mother

  • touches a child or when couples touch.

  • These chemicals also start to cause out-group aggression.

  • This means that you will start to draw closer to the things

  • you are bonded to, porn,

  • and more distant from the things outside

  • the relationship, like your partner.

  • Opiates are released which create a sense of euphoria.

  • Serotonin is also released which creates

  • a feeling of calmness, wellbeing and satisfaction.

  • This is why some people use porn

  • to self-medicate their moods.

  • All of these chemicals train your brain not to bond

  • with another person but with porn.

  • As you consume more porn you get a build up

  • of DeltaFosB which is a molecular switch for addiction,

  • cravings and compulsions.

  • A study from Cambridge University found

  • that the addiction part of the brain lights up

  • on scans when people view porn.

  • People who watch porn start to become hyper-reactive

  • to sexual media.

  • Any hint of it immediately revs them up

  • and their threshold for pleasure raises.

  • A 2011 study found that the dopamine spikes

  • result in porn watchers needing increasingly

  • extreme experiences to become sexually aroused.

  • This often leads to users moving from comparatively

  • tame media to porn featuring more extreme content

  • like group sex, anal, bestiality, bondage or rape.

  • Research has shown that the following behaviours

  • become exhibited in individuals that continue to watch porn.

  • Normalising unhealthy behaviour.

  • Diminished sexual satisfaction when looking

  • at porn or engaging in sex.

  • Irritability, headaches, anxiety,

  • and depression when going without porn or sex.

  • Needing more sex, more risky sex,

  • or more graphic disturbing porn over a longer period of time

  • to get the same high.

  • They can even become unexcited by ordinary sex.

  • Invest in more time and effort to seek out sex.

  • Important social, occupational, or recreational activities

  • are sacrificed in order to engage in sex.

  • Essentially, porn starts to negatively affect many aspects

  • of your life in significant ways.

  • There are many ways to get help you and kick this habit.

  • Your brain is still an amazing mass of cells

  • that you can re-train.

  • Rather than walking down the same well used mountain path

  • you can develop a new path down the mountain.

  • To begin with it or feel unnatural,

  • like you are walking through waist deep snow,

  • however as you continue to make positive choices

  • the path becomes easier and more natural.

  • Essentially, you're re-train your brain

  • with thinking patterns.

  • So, is porn really a harmless habit?

  • Were you surprised how it can affects your brain?

  • If you enjoyed this check out my channel Lifelong Learners.

  • There's some great videos there about thinking,

  • technology, psychological experiments, and more.

  • Leave a comment below, and remember to subscribe

  • and give us a thumbs up.

  • And a special thanks to Brandon

  • and OnePercentBetter for collaborating with me on this.

  • Thanks for watching!

- Porn and your brain.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it